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<http://cryptome.org/bush-kills.htm>
31 January 2002
_________________________________________________________________
J'ACCUSE: BUSH'S DEATH SQUADS
By Wayne Madsen
31 January 2002
Today, The Washington Post ran the fifth segment in its series on what
transpired within the Bush Cabinet in the aftermath of September 11.
Of particular interest is what CIA Director George Tenent brought to
the table at Camp David last September 15. According to the article
by Bob Woodward and Dan Balz, when Tenent produced a Top Secret
"Worldwide Attack Matrix" that specified targets in 80 countries
around the world, he sought unprecedented authority to simply
assassinate foreign terrorists directly or though allied intelligence
services. The CIA even prepared a "Memorandum of Notification" which
would allow the agency to have virtual carte blanche to conduct
political assasinations abroad. This Memorandum trumped previous
mechanisms by which the President would authorize intelligence actions
(but not assassinations) through individual Presidential Findings. The
fail safe mechanisms established under the administrations of
Presidents Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush I, and Clinton were simply
erased at the urging of Tenent. In light of these revelations, what
was authorized by the President may have led to the assassinations of
a umber of human rights and ethnic leaders not connected in any way
with Al Qaeda but did represent bothersome roadblocks to a number of
U.S. military and corporate interests.
It now seems likely, given the unprecedented "license to kill"
President Bush granted to the CIA, there was U.S. complicity in the
murders of the following individuals. Human rights commissions and war
crime tribunals in Belgium and France should take a close look at
these likely criminal misadventures:
1. Theys Eluay. Today, the Indonesian army chief, General Endriartono
Sutarto, confirmed in Jakarta that West Papuan independence leader
Theys Eluay was assassinated by Indonesian Army units after he was
kidnapped last November 11. The assassins were members of KOPASSUS, a
special operations unit trained by U.S. Special Forces and CIA
personnel and was involved in massacres in East Timor during the
Indonesian occupation of that country. In 1969, West Papua was
formally handed over to Indonesia by the United Nations after a
referendum, now widely recognized as rigged, determined that the
non-Indonesian population wanted to be Indonesian. Eluay was a thorn
in the side of Freeport McMoran, a Louisiana-based mining company that
has pillaged West Papua's natural resources and has been accused by
local activists of propping up local Indonesian army and KOPASSUS
officers with bribes and favors. Henry Kissinger serves as a Director
Emeritus on the board of directors of Freeport and former Louisiana
Senator J. Bennett Johnston, recently identified as a lobbyist for
Enron, serves as a full member of the board.
2. Abdullah Syafii. On January 22, 2002, Indonesian army troops
assassinated the military commander of the Free Aceh Movement,
Abdullah Syafii. The Free Aceh Movement demands independence for Aceh,
a region in northwest Sumatra, and is a member of the non-violent
Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), an
international organization headquartered in the Netherlands. It has
also been at loggerheads with ExxonMobil, which has extensive drilling
and refining operations in the territory. Aceh's Governor Abdullah
Puteh, who is claimed by local activists to be on the payroll of
ExxonMobil, had written a letter to Syafii inviting him to attend
peace talks with the government. Syafii's lieutenants claim that the
letter contained a small microchip that permitted Indonesian KOPASSUS
troops to track him down and ambush him. The operation has all the
earmarks of the CIA, which can rely on National Security Agency (NSA)
satellites to track such microchip transponders.
3. Elie Hobeika. Elie Hobeika was the head of the Lebanese Forces
militia, a right-wing Christian army that was allied with Israel
during its 1982 occupation of Beirut. Although Hobeika was in charge
of the Christian forces that massacred hundreds of Palestinian men,
women, and children at the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps that year,
he had irrefutable evidence that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
had authorized the mass murder in his role as Israeli Defense
Minister. An official Israeli commission of inquiry found Sharon
indirectly responsible for the massacres. Hobeika was going to testify
against Sharon at an upcoming Belgian war crimes tribunal which has
already indicted Sharon for the war crimes. It was that testimony that
resulted in Hobeika being silenced by a Mossad car bomb that exploded
near his SUV near Beirut. The bomb killed Hobeika and his bodyguards.
The CIA, now closely allied with Mossad, is said to have given its
approval for the action.
4. Chief Bola Ige. On December 23, 2001, Chief Bola Ige, the Minister
of Justice and Attorney General of Nigeria, was assassinated in the
bedroom of his home in Ibadan by unknown gunmen. Ige was a leader of
the Yorubas, a largely Christian ethnic group that has championed the
cause of southern Nigerian Christian tribes like the Igbo, Ogoni, and
Yoruba that maintain grievances against exploitative Western oil
companies that have spoiled their lands with pollution and pocketed
most of the oil revenues for themselves and corrupt Nigerian
politicians. Ige was the presidential candidate of the pan-Yoruba
Alliance for Democracy but lost to the current President Olusegum
Obasanjo, a former general who is thought by many Nigerians to be in
the hip pocket of western oil companies, including Chevron and
ExxonMobil. A lucrative CIA and Pentagon front operation, the private
military contractor MPRI, has been training special units of the
Nigerian armed forces. These forces have been active in putting down
anti-oil industry protests by Igbo, Ogoni, and Yoruba tribal peoples
along the Nigerian coast. Michael J. Boskin, the Chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisers under President Bush I is a member of the
Exxon Mobil board, while current National Security Adviser
Condolleezza Rice served on the board of Chevron. Currently serving on
Chevron's Board is Bush I trade representative Carla Hills and former
Louisiana Senator Johnston, who also serves on the board of Freeport
McMoran.
In all likelihood all of these assassinations were likely known to the
CIA and allowed to take place unhindered. The killings all directly
benefitted the interests of the US military-industrial complex that
President Eisenhower so poignantly warned us about some 40 years ago.
****
I more or less predicted the Indonesian murders a few months ago (just
after Tenent received authorization to conduct assassinations of
"terrorists") during an interview with Radio Singapore International.
The transcript of that broadcast follows:
CIA assassination missions - a look into the implications of this US
Foreign policy
Source: Augustine Anthuvan, Newsline, Radio Singapore International
Broadcast date: 30 October 2001
Wayne Madsen, a former Intelligence Officer at the National Security
Agency in Washington with this comment.
When Senator Frank Church had a committee in the
Senate that found out that the CIA was conducting assassination
missions against foreign leaders and they passed very stringent laws
against the CIA to prevent any abuses. And now what we're hearing is
that the late Senator Church went too far. Well Senator Church was
responding to some very severe abuses of authority by the CIA. And now
we're hearing basically history is being changed on us here and we're
hearing that Senator Church went too far in what he did.
And I think its very important now to understand
that these things are all in context and what people like Senator
Frank Church did in the 1970s really still applies today."
If CIA assassination missions are taken beyond the
present operations in Afghanistan to other countries where terrorists
are known to be operating, what sort of repercussions will this
present for country to country relations? A concern I posed to Wayne
Madsen.
"Especially in countries in South East Asia, we have
a President who is very much in it with the US multi-national
companies. What if they decide that West Papua independence movement
in Irian Jaya - West Papua - could be a terrorist organization. And
they could decide well we're going to target their leadership for
assassination because they happen to be against the interests of
Freeport McMoran - one of the biggest mining companies in West Papua.
Or what if they decide that the Aceh movement in Northern Sumatra
happens to be ....... to the interests of Exxon Mobil corporation, and
they decide to target their leadership for assassination. I think this
is the problem with this type of wide sweeping authorization to
assassinate foreign leaders. We may find ourselves assassinating
people because they just so happen to be against US interests. "
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